WILMINGTON, Del. — Joe Biden mentioned Donald Trump as much as Kamala Harris during his speech introducing her as his running mate here on Wednesday. That’s a reflection of the presumptive Democratic nominee’s desire to keep this election a referendum on the president as much as possible, even amid the history-making debut of the first Black woman and first Asian American to be a major-party candidate for vice president. The former vice president noted that their first joint appearance, held in a mostly empty high school gymnasium near his house because of the novel coronavirus, coincided with the third anniversary of the violence in Charlottesville, where hundreds of white nationalists, neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan members defending a Confederate statue clashed with counterprotesters in the streets. A white supremacist plowed his car into a crowd, leaving a young woman dead and 19 others injured. Biden reiterated on Wednesday, as he has said countless times, that Trump’s comment afterward that there were “very fine people on both sides” is what prompted him to run for president. “On January 20th, 2021, we're all going to watch Senator Harris raise her right hand and swear the oath of office as the first woman ever to serve in the second highest office in this land,” Biden said, “and then we're going to get to work fixing the mess that President Trump and Vice President Pence have created, both at home and abroad, through four years of mismanagement and coddling of terrorists and thugs around the world. … And we have a racial justice crisis that Donald Trump seeks only to inflame with his politics of racist rhetoric and division.” Biden, 77, made clear that part of Harris’s appeal during the drawn-out selection process was her proven ability, as the former San Francisco district attorney and California attorney general, to prosecute a case. For the next 82 days, he wants her to take point in prosecuting the political case against the incumbent. “We have all watched her in the United States Senate go toe-to-toe with Trump officials trying to hide the truth, asking the tough questions that needed to be asked and not stopping until she got an answer,” Biden said. “And when none was forthcoming, it was obvious what the answer was.” Harris also spoke almost as much about Trump as herself after Biden socially distanced himself from the lectern. “Let me tell you, as somebody who has presented my fair share of arguments in court, the case against Donald Trump and Mike Pence is open and shut,” the 55-year-old said. “Just look where they've gotten us: More than 16 million out of work, millions of kids who cannot go back to school, a crisis of poverty and homelessness … a crisis of hunger … and, tragically, more than 165,000 lives that have been cut short, many with loved ones who never got the chance to say goodbye.” The senator contrasted Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic with the Obama administration’s handling of the Ebola outbreak in 2014. “Barack Obama and Joe Biden did their job: Only two people in the United States died,” she said. “While other countries are following the science, Trump pushed miracle cures he saw on Fox News. While other countries were flattening the curve, he said the virus would just poof, go away, ‘like a miracle.’ There's a reason it has hit America worse than any other advanced nation. It’s because of Trump's failure to take it seriously from the start, his refusal to get testing up and running, his flip-flopping on social distancing and wearing masks, and his delusional belief that he knows better than the experts. All of that is why an American dies of covid-19 every 80 seconds.” The United States reported nearly 1,500 coronavirus deaths on Wednesday, the highest number of covid-19 fatalities in one day since mid-May. The country has now seen its seven-day average of newly reported deaths remain above 1,000 for 17 consecutive days. The Labor Department announced Thursday that about 960,000 workers filed for unemployment insurance last week. This is the first time that initial claims dipped below 1 million since March, but it’s also still more than the pre-pandemic record of 695,000, which had been set during the 1982 recession. All told, more than 28 million people are currently receiving some form of unemployment benefits. | |
A summer thunderstorm knocked out power in this area, but the lights stayed on inside Alexis I. du Pont High School thanks to a backup generator. The power outage felt like the latest metaphor for 2020, which has already required so much improvisation and adjustment from everyone. There was no crowd to applaud the speeches. Reporters had their temperatures checked, and answered a series of coronavirus screening questions, before being allowed to enter the building. When Harris and Biden finished their speeches, the two appeared to wave and point at nonexistent people in the mostly empty gym. Unlike baseball stadiums, where artificial crowd noise is piped in and printed pictures of fans are put in seats, the gym was mostly empty and silent, except for journalists. But some things never change: The event started late, as was routine for both Biden and Harris rallies during pre-pandemic times. Vice-presidential challengers historically go after the incumbent more forcefully than the person at the top of the ticket so that the presidential nominee can keep his hands a little cleaner. Harris plainly relishes that role. “He inherited the longest economic expansion in history from Barack Obama and Joe Biden and then, like everything else he inherited, he ran it straight into the ground,” she said of Trump. “America is crying out for leadership, yet we have a president who cares more about himself than the people who elected him, a president who is making every challenge we face even more difficult to solve.” To be sure, Biden referenced Harris’s background as the daughter of immigrants. Her mother came from India. Her father came from Jamaica and taught economics at Stanford University. They met while protesting during the civil rights movement in the 1960s. “Her story is America’s story,” Biden said. “Different from mine in many particulars, but also not so different in many of the essentials.” Harris, also, referred to her potential to break glass ceilings. Alluding to criticisms by some people close to Biden during the vetting process that she was too “ambitious,” California’s junior senator said: “Joe, I’m so proud to stand with you, and I do so mindful of all the heroic and ambitious women before me, whose sacrifice, determination and resilience makes my presence here today even possible.” Biden attacked the president over his refusal to meet with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) since House Democrats voted to impeach him last year. “Trump is on the golf course,” Biden said. “He hasn't even met with the leadership. He doesn't have time, it appears.” Neither Biden nor Harris offered specifics during their speeches on Wednesday for how they would “build back better,” to use the campaign’s mantra. “The Joe Biden and Kamala Harris administration will have a comprehensive plan,” Biden declared, without much elaboration. On taxes, health care and climate policy, Harris has staked out more liberal positions than Biden. Harris introduced legislation last month to provide monthly $2,000 payments to tens of millions of Americans, for example. She has also proposed banning evictions, foreclosures, rent increases and utility shutdowns until the pandemic is over. A spokesman for the Biden campaign declined to comment on whether the campaign supports Harris’s plans to respond to the contagion. “Biden’s economic plan for responding to the pandemic says that lawmakers ‘could include cash payments to working families’ as part of a broader package but does not specify an amount for the payment,” Jeff Stein notes. “Biden’s plan also pushes a ‘federal partnership’ with states and cities for rental relief ‘so no one faces evictions,’ but not an outright ban.” Biden and Harris participate in a virtual fundraiser on Wednesday night at the Hotel Du Pont in Wilmington. (Carolyn Kaster/AP) |
As Biden introduced Harris, he mentioned that Trump had called her “nasty.” Just as Trump called Hillary Clinton “such a nasty woman” during a debate in 2016, the president is complaining this week that Harris was “extraordinarily nasty” to Brett Kavanaugh after the nominee to the Supreme Court was accused of sexual assault in 2018. Trump also said Biden picking Harris caught him off guard because she was “very, very nasty” to him during the Democratic nominating contest. “It's no surprise because whining is what Donald Trump does best, better than any president in American history,” Biden said. “Is anyone surprised Donald Trump has a problem with a strong woman or strong women across the board?” After their event at the high school, Biden and Harris went to the Hotel Du Pont in downtown Wilmington. They held a virtual fundraiser in a ballroom that had been set up with jumbo screens. Biden announced during the event, which streamed on Zoom, that the campaign raised $26 million in the 24 hours after he announced Harris, including from 150,000 first-time contributors. The Biden campaign said afterward that more than 40,000 people watched the fundraiser live and that $9.6 million was raised by the end of the event. Biden launched his long-shot Senate campaign at the hotel in 1972 and celebrated the night of his upset victory – just weeks before his first wife and infant daughter died near here in a tragic car accident. Harris now has a Secret Service detail, with a motorcade of black Suburbans parked on a side street. Biden and Harris will appear together again later Thursday for a briefing on covid-19, and both are scheduled to deliver remarks. She still must introduce herself to a lot of Americans who did not pay much attention to the Democratic nominating contest. A New York Times-Siena College poll in June found that 26 percent of registered voters had no opinion when asked to rate Harris, while 40 percent viewed her favorably and 35 percent viewed her unfavorably. Her next chance to make an impression will come Wednesday night when she speaks to the Democratic National Convention. Harris, like all the other speakers, will appear virtually instead of going to Milwaukee, where it was scheduled to take place. Trump just announced that he will hold a campaign event in Wisconsin on Monday. He criticized Biden and Harris for “not even going to pay the respect of at least making a stopover.” “Harris is expected to conduct most events virtually, as Biden has, but could also be deployed to some battleground states. While Biden has done a handful of in-person events, there is little expectation that he would increase that pace, given health concerns,” Annie Linskey and Matt Viser report. Trump and his allies are struggling to find a focused attack on Harris. Harris was called a “phony” by Trump’s reelection campaign and a “far-left radical” by his surrogates. During a White House news conference shortly after the Biden-Harris event in the gym, Trump mocked Harris for her failed presidential campaign. “She said horrible things about him,” he said. “Now all of the sudden she’s running to be vice president saying how wonderful he is.” “The messages varied wildly — casting her as both an overzealous prosecutor too tough on crime and an advocate for defunding the police, and as being so far to the left she would institute socialism as well as too moderate to satisfy her party’s progressive base,” Phil Rucker and Isaac Stanley-Becker report. “The scattershot nature of the intersecting lines of attack also underscored the lack of consensus within the GOP about how best to take on Harris. Considering Trump’s long history of misogynistic comments and his declining popularity among female voters, some Republican strategists suggested that he proceed with more caution when talking about Harris — and, better yet, leave it to surrogates who might deliver criticism on his behalf with more discipline and less personal baggage.” |